| name | agent-readiness |
| description | Show how mature/safe this codebase is for heavy AI-agent use — a synthesis dashboard across 8 pillars, aggregating signals the harness already collects. Read-only report; aggregates state already on disk. |
| argument-hint | [--root DIR] |
| context | fork |
Agent readiness report
A read-only synthesis dashboard: how mature/safe is this codebase for heavy
AI-agent use? Loosely inspired by Factory.ai's "agent readiness" framing (8
pillars × maturity levels), adapted to what THIS harness actually tracks.
It aggregates signals the harness's own sensors and gates already produce —
it computes nothing new. Gap G21.
Usage
node .claude/scripts/agent-readiness.js
node .claude/scripts/agent-readiness.js --root /path/to/project
npm run agent-readiness
Writes specs/reviews/agent-readiness.md (human-readable) and
specs/reviews/agent-readiness.json (machine-readable). Report-only —
exit 0 always, the same convention harness-coverage.js (gap G11) uses.
Run it on a cadence via /schedule, or on demand before onboarding an
agent to heavy autonomous work on a codebase.
The 8 pillars
| Pillar | What it reads |
|---|
| Style & Validation | Lint/type config presence + whether the tool is actually provisioned (not just referenced) |
| Architecture Fitness | .claude/state/cycle-baseline.txt + coupling-baseline.txt (G8/G18 ratchets established?) |
| Testing | Coverage ratchet baseline, mutation-gate (G7), regression gates (G15/G16), acceptance-test artifacts (G20, informational) |
| Code Quality / Modularity Freshness | .claude/state/modularity-review-marker.json vs the live code-graph's unstable hubs (G19), reusing drift.js's withModularityStaleness |
| Documentation / Navigation | Whether the living DeepWiki/code-graph is fresh (not STALE-stamped) |
| Observability | project-manifest.json#observability.enabled (G9) |
| Security & Governance | Whether security-scan.js (G3)'s enhanced tools (semgrep/gitleaks/npm+pip-audit) are actually provisioned |
| Dev Environment | init.sh existence and whether it matches project-manifest.json#verification.mode |
Each pillar reports one of active / partial / planned — the exact
vocabulary harness-manifest.json#model.statuses already defines — plus a
one-line, concrete remediation when it isn't active.
Relationship to /status
/status and /agent-readiness both aggregate state the harness already
writes and answer different questions — they are not redundant:
/status — where is the current SDLC pipeline run right now?
Phase, group progress, health, next action. Time-scoped to an active
/auto//build run.
/agent-readiness — how mature is this codebase's control system,
independent of any run? A standing snapshot of which of the 8 pillars are
wired and healthy, usable even when no pipeline is currently executing —
including against a codebase this harness has never touched.
When to use
- Before handing a codebase to an agent for heavy autonomous work, to see
what's actually governed vs. still manual.
- Periodically (via
/schedule) to watch pillar adoption drift over time,
the same way npm run drift watches architecture/dependency drift.
- After
/scaffold or /brownfield, to confirm the baseline controls
(ratchets, navigation, observability) actually got established, not just
configured.
This is a reporting surface only. It does not advance any pillar itself —
use /code-map, /brownfield, /scaffold, /deploy, npm run cycles,
npm run coupling-gate, etc. for that.